unhouse

Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

v. To remove (someone's or something's) from (someones' or something's) house or housing.

v. To take away a house from.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English

transitive v. To drive from a house or habitation; to dislodge; hence, to deprive of shelter.

from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

To drive from the house or habitation; dislodge. To deprive of shelter.

Etymologies

un- +‎ house (Wiktionary)

Examples

It would be interesting to have a discussion of what tradeoffs we can bear and how we ought to structure them; such a discussion is difficult among folk who equate a recognition of the existence of tradeoffs with a malicious desire to unhouse the cancer-ridden.

I want to be able to engage in the grand calling of a Socratic teacher, which is not to persuade and convince students, but the unsettle -- to unsettle and unnerve and maybe even unhouse a few students, so that they experience that wonderful vertigo and dizziness in recognizing at least for a moment that their world view rests on putting, but then see that they have something to fall back on.

It was customary at this time for dram-shops to keep badgers housed in long narrow boxes, and for working men to keep dogs; and it was part of the ordinary sport of such places to set the dogs to unhouse the badgers.